Maximum Yield USA April/May 2019 | Page 54

FIVE EASILY CONFUSED PLANT PROBLEMS TWO BLIGHT OR DROUGHT STRESS? Late blight (Phytopthora infestans) is a devastating fungal infection whose name strikes dread into any vegetable cultivator growing in a mild, damp climate. Once rain washes late blight spores onto your plants, they spread voraciously, reducing potatoes and tomatoes to rotten mush within a few weeks. Alarm bells should start ringing as soon as you spot tell-tale brown patches on the leaves. However, brown spots also turn up on tomato and potato leaves after prolonged spells of drought. Plants usually recover from drought, but blight is always fatal. Telling Them Apart: At first glance, the browning caused by drought damage and the lesions of late blight look quite similar. But look closer and you’ll find the brown patches on drought-stressed leaves are just dry, dead leaf. Blight lesions, by contrast, are fuzzy with spores. They also sometimes appear on the stem. ONE RED SPIDER MITE OR MAGNESIUM DEFICIENCY? Imagine a greenhouse full of cucumbers whose leaves gradually begin to turn yellow. At a glance, you could easily diagnose the problem as a lack of magnesium, an essential mineral that plants need to produce healthy leaves and photosynthesize. However, look closer and you may notice tiny specks clustering under the leaves and fine web-like threads. These are the tell-tale signs of the red spider mite, a tiny but voracious sap-sucker that attacks most greenhouse crops from mid to late summer. Telling Them Apart: Red spider mites tend to cause finely mottled leaves, while a magnesium deficiency causes leaves to be blotchier. Also, unlike with red spider mites, the veins of magnesium-deficient leaves stay green. To make sure what you’re dealing with, turn the leaves over. Red spider mites appear as tiny yellowish-green specks on the undersides. As infections build, they also produce a fine silk webbing much like cobwebs. Treatment: Red Spider Mite: Keep numbers down by releasing a biological control such as the predatory mite Phytoseiulus persimilis, or spray with insecticidal soap. Magnesium Deficiency: Spray leaves with a foliar feed made of a solution of Epsom salts two or three times every two weeks. 54 Maximum Yield Treatment: Blight: Remove affected foliage to slow the spread. Pick off tomato fruits straight away. For potatoes in which the infection covers about a third of the plant, cut away the top growth and harvest early. Drought damage: Prune out affected growth and the plant should recover. Also take the steps to improve water delivery. A compost mulch over damp soil locks in water, and irrigation channels alongside each row make sure none is lost to evaporation.